The Wyckoff House is the oldest surviving building in New York City. Built in 1652, it was one of the first structures Europeans built on Long Island. However, the Wyckoff House isn't the only building in NYC with an impressive history!
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Knap of Howar, OrkneyThe UK's oldest surviving building is this Neolithic farmstead on the island of Papa Westray in Orkney.
The Saltford Manor is a stone house in Saltford, Somerset, near Bath, that is thought to be the oldest continuously occupied private house in England, and has been designated as a Grade II* listed building.
The East Village townhouse at 44 Stuyvesant Street in the St.Marks Place Historic District has retained most of its original layout, according to Mansion Global. The 5,500-square-foot, 24-foot-wide home is the oldest building in Manhattan that has been used continuously as a single-family dwelling.
The Home Insurance Building, built in 1885 and located on the corner of Adams and LaSalle Streets in Chicago, Illinois, went down in history as the world's first modern skyscraper.
The Dyckman Farmhouse Museum in the Inwood section of Manhattan, is a Dutch Colonial style house constructed in 1784 of fieldstone, brick and wood, and is the oldest remaining farmhouse in Manhattan.
Colchester: Oldest Recorded Settlement in EnglandColchester in Essex, England, considers itself the oldest recorded settlement in England. It also served as England's first capital. There may have been a settlement sometime between 400 and 500 BCE, and the first century CE played host to the Romans.